The woman badly burned when Cory Lidle’s plane slammed into her 30th-floor apartment last year is suing the late Yankee pitcher’s widow – and gearing up to move back into her rebuilt apartment by the Oct. 11 anniversary of the crash, according to her lawyer.

Ilana Benhuri, 51, spent most of the summer in California while contractors restored the charred and wrecked apartment at 524 E. 72nd St.

Benhuri stopped by the apartment Thursday to check the progress, according to the doorman.

The suit, filed Aug. 6 in Manhattan Supreme Court, does not specify damages. It names Melanie Lidle and Stephanie Stanger, the widows of Lidle and Tyler Stanger, the flying instructor who was with the major leaguer in the doomed craft.

Benhuri’s husband, Parviz, is also party to the suit, claiming he was unable to have sex with his wife due to her injuries. He also seeks compensation for her hospital fees.

Benhuri was sitting at a table paying bills when Lidle’s two-seater Cirrus SR-20 crashed into her apartment, she said last year. The explosion threw her through the air, leaving her burned and stunned.

“At first I thought I was dead,” she said after she was released from Weill Cornell Medical Center.

Benhuri spent a month in the hospital enduring several surgeries and skin grafts on her badly burned legs.

Lidle and Stanger miscalculated a sharp left-hand turn and were killed instantly when the plane flew into the high-rise building while attempting to avoid flying into restricted airspace.

National Transportation Safety Board investigators have not been able to determine who was controlling the plane.